Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Aug. 30, 1969, edition 1 / Page 3
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FROM RALEIGH’S OFFICIAL POLICE FILES THE CRIME BEAT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) STRUCK WITH STICK James Edward Foreman, 29, 406 E. Martin Street., to)d Of ficer W. B. Harrington at 3 p.m, Saturday, that he was at home when Macon Poole, 55, address unlisted, '“started acting up by getting a stick about 15 feet long and hitting me across the head two or three times.'’ Mr. Poole was arrested and charged with assault with a deadly weapon. Foreman suf fered injuries of the head. * * * hit in face Carson Dennis, 58-year-old resident of 4 Granville Terrace, informed Officer R a B. Tant at 7:11 p.m, Saturday, that he was walking in the 400 block of 5. Person Street when a burgundy colored car pulled up and one of Us occupants asked him to come over there. Whe he bent dovTi beside the car, this per sons hit him in the face with his fist. Dennis was unable to give any description of the man who struck him. except the occup ants of the car were colored. Dennis, who Officer Tant re ported “had been drinking some kind of alcoholic beverage,” w'as taken to Wake Memorial Hospital, where he was treated for a nose bleed. * * * STABBED IN BACK Howard Rudolph Young, 26, 262 Branch Street, reported to Officer G. E. Booth at 10:- 07 p.m. Saturday, that he was walking in front of his house SEEKS YOUNG MEN WITH with briefcase in hand, catches the at tention of Tampa’s (Fla.) Central Avenue re sidents as he starts in his search for young men with dreams of full employment. York, an executive with Honeywell’s Communica tions and Data Products Division in Tampa, is on six-month loan to the National Alliance of Businessmen to spearhead its concentrated local program to find employment for hard core unemployed, (NPI photo). Gilbey’s Gin Up fi Vjf/ 2.40 PINT 3*B(K QUART DISTILLED LONDON DRY QIN, SO PROOF. IOCS GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. W. & A. GILBEY, LTD. BISYH. BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CO., N. Y. C. PRODUCT OF U. S. A. when he felt a pain in his right shoulder. He turned to look at the cause of the pain and saw an unidentified subject running east on Branch. He could not give any description of his as sailant. A small knife or other instrument was used. * * * UNNAMED BOYFRIEND CHARGED Miss Phyllis Ann Winston, 1123 Walnut Street, told Officer D. T. Perry at 12:57 a.m, Sat urday, that she was coming home when her boyfriend stop ped her and wanted to know where she had been. They argu ed, and she said the unidenti fied boyfriend hit and kicked her. She said she would sign an assault on a female war rant against the boyfriend. The incident occurred on the street in the 1100 block of Walnut. * * * THROWS FIRCRACKER Miss Gwendolyn Audrey Stokes, 14, 3010 Rich Park (Method), Informed Officers B. M, Perry and W. M. Parker, Jr., at 7:45 p.m. Sunday, that Otis Lewis, 16, 3114 Stedman Drive, threw a firecracker under her feet. She received an ear injury and was x-ray and treated at Rex Hospital. Her mother, Mrs. Annie Mae Stokes, signed an assault warrant and Lewis was arrested. * * * SETS MATTRESS ON FIRE Mrs. PauletteJones,62s Dorothea Drive, reported to Os- ficer R, Clayborne at 2 a.m. Saturday, that she was watch ing television when she smell ed smoke coming from the base ment of her house. Whe she went to the basement she said someone had set the mattress on fire and placed It against the wall, Mrs. Jones also said she saw a colored male leave in a hurry when she came out of the house. There was no damage to the residence. * * * CAR WINDOW SMASHED Garfield McPhatter, 401 W. Lenior Street, told Officer W. J. Fowler at 6:11 a.m. Tues day, that he parked his car at 7 : 30 p.m. Monday and return ed at 6 a.m. the next day to discover that someone had knocked a window out of his 1950 Buick. Damage was set at §3O * * * CAR STEREO *< SWIPED” John Arthur Johnson, Jr., 1001 S. Wilmington Street, in formed Officer Bruce E. Tuck er at 8:1! a.m. Tuesday, that he parked his 1955 Chevrolet in front of his house about 12 midnight the night before and someone removed a stereo tape player, valued atsß6, from it. He listed a suspect as being Earl Hardin Potts, 909 S. Wilm ington Street. * * * RECORD PLAYER “LIFTED” Chester Smith, 2205 Everett Avenue (Oberlir.), reported to Officer D, P. McDonald at 7:- 45 p.m. Thursday, that he left home at 10:30 a.m. and return ed at 12 noon to find that some one had entered his house and stolen his Philco portable stereo record player, valued at $l5O. The player has a built in stand and is w'alnut in color with a burn spot on top, caused by cigarette. * * * WINE DRINKER BEATEN James Cleatus Lanimore, 38-year-o!d white resident of Room 233 Park Centra! Hotel, told Officer Rudolph F. Perry at 5:18 p.m. Thurdav, that he was at the corner of E. Cabar rus and S. Person Streets at 4;55 p.m. and he talked to four young colored males. He stated that they went to 400 Patter son Lane in some high bushes and he argued with one of the boys about drinking his wine. He said the one he had argued with than cut him with a knife. Larrlmore, according to the cop’s report, was drunk when this occurred and the officer was unable to locate his at tacker, Larrimore suffered a four-inch cut under his right eye. * * * TAKE? AN OVERDOSE Willie Steve Gray, 814 E. Jones Street, Informed Of ficer G, W. Black at 4:23 p.m. Tuesday, that he found Johnny Jones, Jr., on the bed about 2:55 p.m. and could not get him to wake up, Jones was taken Children's Deportment 1 [ipjlldllV DOWNTOWN STYLE MANS HIP ('iQ LAZY-BOKES MyJ&k i it»i IH. iinMvn yacicir Olive Calf f CELEBRATES FIRST BIRTHDAY - Little Timothy Edwin Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hall, Jr., 22 Lincoln Ter race (Chavis Heights) will cel ebrate his first birthday on Sun day, August 31. A big birthday party is planned. to Wake Memorial Hospital for treatment of an overdose of barbltuates. * * * Suspicion leads many people into mistakes. It Pavs To J Advertise Alexander Bldg. P. O. Box 292 SUITE m T & T Associates DISTRIBUTORS OP EDUCATIONAL'MATERIAL 133 Fayetteville St. Raleigh. North Carolina 27601 Aesc T & T Travel Service We are now booking football games, charters and tours for the Atlanta Falcons in Atlanta and Washington Red Skins in Washington, as well as tours to the beaches and mountains. Any of our competent personnel will be glad to aid you in travel arrangements and information. Every item that needs to be looked after is carefully planned from the time you leave until you return. INFORMATION FREELY GIVEN Write, Come by or Call A. J. TURNER Bu». (919) 828-2954 Pr*»id«nt-M«n»8»r Ksi. (919) 835-5871 Priorities Are Set For Ne am WASHINGTON, D.C.-Thena tion’s program to help poor families become homerowners has a new set of social pri orities, and FHA field offices now have more decision-mak ing power to meet the pro gram goals. The liberalized changes were revealed in St, Louis by Wil liam B. Ross, Acting Assistant Secretary for Mortgage Credit of the !’. S. Department of Hous ing and Urban Development and Acting Commissioner of the Federal Housing Administra tion. Mr. Ross told the National Association of Real Estate Brokers, Inc., that HUD and FHA have decentralized the year-old program, to give FHA’s 75 district insuring offices full say-so or, which projects shall receive Federal funds to help low-income buyers pay for their homes. At the same time, he told the Negro Realists at their an naul convention, district direct ors have been given a set of guidelines to follow to make sure that important social ob jectives will be achieVed. He indicated the scope of the pro gram by stating that nearly 210,- 000 lower income families could buy homes by use of §7O mil lion of Federal funds already in hand and §IOO million more the Administration has request ed for the current fiscal year. Commissioner Ross said FHA field directors: . Must give priority of proj ects most likely to get tinder wav fast. . Must look for projects that Will further Fair Housing pur poses. Must mane sure some funds will rehabilitate older housing in city cores. . Must favor projects that offer training u ; ties for area 11 , Must seek pro . , < i i minority bustin the action. , Must work v u other local, stat. groups to us" funds to pit, i needed in Mo ;«■ renewal, .ml >t! . grams Frog i' a ii, in home buyer.- ■ , but tk.e first 1 pet c- m est on their 71 _ ; • i insured n orm , . erally, the f.< this assist.i:., ■ comes no moi > , , above the inco.: • enough to entei ■ projects. Personal RENDERING 111 ’ SERVICE Evangelist 1204 S. Bloodv i, t now renderin. ice in Louisburt Sister Davis is Weeping V. ill Church, 1000 bith U Street. Firm < . bring the saveu . ed, the sick an service which will end on Su. TOOTHACHE Don't y.,hr ... ! pain in seconds as ORA-111. Many ;i : ‘ using ORA-JEL unt . -t professional treats:, ora-jel fjiM Iyii| ! - A f | f v|! ' ! i fit •: WH I 1\ 1| nourishes i ra siifce < iV* HISL !;|l||j tllllic ill 'll#- THE CAROLINIAN vl i itiH. N C SATURDAY. AUGUST ’O. 1969 ngjpss enacted this inter ■ supplr-a out program last and . r - i ha §25 million tart it off. Those funds , quick! - committed at the ■a and regional level to ue-.i: l ■ 3n,000 families bus s. About 7,500 are already "!■ * peii t ouses. Get Ready For Fail & Back To School IgA \ ! und Double Breasted —-with ' • and without Vests. All jHuKjSt I’tst In! A complete new ffpjilf ' At ; S is Belt and Regular Mod-' Tlu Fashion Leader in / |v J J ! ?■ lea’s and Boys’ Shoes /i/Wf A Buckle Loafers and Lace Ups l yy l|E n all New Shades. Trade at ! fj «|| Daniel’s where your business 1 /I \ | s appreciated . . . Always the ( si i newest styles first. f 1 | OPEN FRI ’TIL 9P. M \ i | jj fcdY THE E Z WAY . AIL CHARGE PLANS OR USE OUR LAY - AWAY PLArt D\ I^Tlfy 7 F 9 XTL 1 JLJLv-i-v T 3 RALEIGH, N. C. When you have work to do, you tniri.t well do it. No one <ls v. ill do it for you. * * * It’s not money that causes so much trouble, but the mis conception that aloi of it can be had for nothing. * * * One trouble with the world 1 s that there are too many peopi., v: o rio no work. 3
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Aug. 30, 1969, edition 1
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